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Full Discussion: Help with awk
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Help with awk Post 302099489 by isingh786 on Tuesday 12th of December 2006 11:22:31 AM
Old 12-12-2006
change in requirement

Hi Jim,

Thanks for the response.

Actually there has been slight change in requirement.

ISA*00* *00* *01*xxxxx *01*yyyyy *061211*110
5*U*00401*000001250*0*P*^
GS*FA*xxxx*yyyy*20061211*1105*1246*X*004010
ST*997*12460001
AK1*IN*452
AK2*810*0001
AK5*A
AK9*A*5*5*5
SE*6*12460001
GE*1*1246
IEA*1*000001250

I have to generate a report from this file, which should have the sixth segment of ISA, which is xxxx in this case and then print Ak9 2nd segment which is "5" in this case.

Guys please help me as this is urgent.
 

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Class::ISA(3pm) 					 Perl Programmers Reference Guide					   Class::ISA(3pm)

NAME
Class::ISA -- report the search path for a class's ISA tree SYNOPSIS
# Suppose you go: use Food::Fishstick, and that uses and # inherits from other things, which in turn use and inherit # from other things. And suppose, for sake of brevity of # example, that their ISA tree is the same as: @Food::Fishstick::ISA = qw(Food::Fish Life::Fungus Chemicals); @Food::Fish::ISA = qw(Food); @Food::ISA = qw(Matter); @Life::Fungus::ISA = qw(Life); @Chemicals::ISA = qw(Matter); @Life::ISA = qw(Matter); @Matter::ISA = qw(); use Class::ISA; print "Food::Fishstick path is: ", join(", ", Class::ISA::super_path('Food::Fishstick')), " "; That prints: Food::Fishstick path is: Food::Fish, Food, Matter, Life::Fungus, Life, Chemicals DESCRIPTION
Suppose you have a class (like Food::Fish::Fishstick) that is derived, via its @ISA, from one or more superclasses (as Food::Fish::Fish- stick is from Food::Fish, Life::Fungus, and Chemicals), and some of those superclasses may themselves each be derived, via its @ISA, from one or more superclasses (as above). When, then, you call a method in that class ($fishstick->calories), Perl first searches there for that method, but if it's not there, it goes searching in its superclasses, and so on, in a depth-first (or maybe "height-first" is the word) search. In the above example, it'd first look in Food::Fish, then Food, then Matter, then Life::Fungus, then Life, then Chemicals. This library, Class::ISA, provides functions that return that list -- the list (in order) of names of classes Perl would search to find a method, with no duplicates. FUNCTIONS
the function Class::ISA::super_path($CLASS) This returns the ordered list of names of classes that Perl would search thru in order to find a method, with no duplicates in the list. $CLASS is not included in the list. UNIVERSAL is not included -- if you need to consider it, add it to the end. the function Class::ISA::self_and_super_path($CLASS) Just like "super_path", except that $CLASS is included as the first element. the function Class::ISA::self_and_super_versions($CLASS) This returns a hash whose keys are $CLASS and its (super-)superclasses, and whose values are the contents of each class's $VERSION (or undef, for classes with no $VERSION). The code for self_and_super_versions is meant to serve as an example for precisely the kind of tasks I anticipate that self_and_super_path and super_path will be used for. You are strongly advised to read the source for self_and_super_versions, and the comments there. CAUTIONARY NOTES
* Class::ISA doesn't export anything. You have to address the functions with a "Class::ISA::" on the front. * Contrary to its name, Class::ISA isn't a class; it's just a package. Strange, isn't it? * Say you have a loop in the ISA tree of the class you're calling one of the Class::ISA functions on: say that Food inherits from Matter, but Matter inherits from Food (for sake of argument). If Perl, while searching for a method, actually discovers this cyclicity, it will throw a fatal error. The functions in Class::ISA effectively ignore this cyclicity; the Class::ISA algorithm is "never go down the same path twice", and cyclicities are just a special case of that. * The Class::ISA functions just look at @ISAs. But theoretically, I suppose, AUTOLOADs could bypass Perl's ISA-based search mechanism and do whatever they please. That would be bad behavior, tho; and I try not to think about that. * If Perl can't find a method anywhere in the ISA tree, it then looks in the magical class UNIVERSAL. This is rarely relevant to the tasks that I expect Class::ISA functions to be put to, but if it matters to you, then instead of this: @supers = Class::Tree::super_path($class); do this: @supers = (Class::Tree::super_path($class), 'UNIVERSAL'); And don't say no-one ever told ya! * When you call them, the Class::ISA functions look at @ISAs anew -- that is, there is no memoization, and so if ISAs change during run- time, you get the current ISA tree's path, not anything memoized. However, changing ISAs at runtime is probably a sign that you're out of your mind! COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 1999, 2000 Sean M. Burke. All rights reserved. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. AUTHOR
Sean M. Burke "sburke@cpan.org" perl v5.8.0 2002-06-01 Class::ISA(3pm)
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